#include <X11/extensions/XInput2.h>
void XIChangeProperty( Display* dpy, int deviceid, Atom property, Atom type, int format, int mode, unsigned char *data, int num_items)
void XIDeleteProperty( Display *dpy, int deviceid, Atom property)
Status XIGetProperty( Display *dpy, int deviceid, Atom property, long offset, long length, Bool delete_property, Atom type, Atom *type_return, int *format_return, unsigned long *num_items_return, unsigned long *bytes_after_return, unsigned char **data)
bytes_after_return Returns the number of bytes remaining to be read in the prop- erty if a partial read was performed.
data Specifies the property data.
display Specifies the connection to the X server.
delete_property Specifies a Boolean value that determines whether the property is to be deleted.
deviceid The device to list the properties for.
format Specifies whether the data should be viewed as a list of 8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit quantities. Possible values are 8, 16, and 32. This information allows the X server to correctly perform byte-swap operations as necessary. If the format is 16-bit or 32-bit, you must explicitly cast your data pointer to an (unsigned char *) in the call to XIChangeProperty.
format_return Returns the actual format of the property.
length Specifies the length in 32-bit multiples of the data to be retrieved.
offset Specifies the offset in the specified property (in 32-bit quantities) where the data is to be retrieved.
mode One of PropModeAppend, PropModePrepend or PropModeReplace.
num_items Number of items in data in the format specified.
nitems_return Returns the actual number of 8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit items stored in data.
property Specifies the property name.
type Specifies the type of the property. The X server does not interpret the type but simply passes it back to an application that later calls XIGetProperty.
type_return Returns the atom identifier that defines the actual type of the property.
The XIGetProperty function returns the actual type of the property; the actual format of the property; the number of 8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit items transferred; the number of bytes remaining to be read in the property; and a pointer to the data actually returned. XIGetProperty sets the return arguments as follows:
N = length of the stored property in bytes I = 4 * offset T = N - I L = MINIMUM(T, 4 * length) A = N - (I + L)
The returned value starts at byte index I in the property (indexing from zero), and its length in bytes is L. If the value for long_offset causes L to be negative, a BadValue error results. The value of bytes_after_return is A, giving the number of trailing unread bytes in the stored property.
If the returned format is 8, the returned data is represented as a char array. If the returned format is 16, the returned data is represented as a uint16_t array and should be cast to that type to obtain the ele- ments. If the returned format is 32, the returned data is represented as a uint32_t array and should be cast to that type to obtain the elements.
XIGetProperty always allocates one extra byte in prop_return (even if the property is zero length) and sets it to zero so that simple properties consisting of characters do not have to be copied into yet another string before use.
If delete is True and bytes_after_return is zero, XIGetProperty deletes the property from the window and generates an XIPropertyNotify event on the window.
The function returns Success if it executes successfully. To free the resulting data, use XFree.
XIGetProperty can generate BadAtom, BadValue, and BadWindow errors.
The XIChangeProperty function alters the property for the specified device and causes the X server to generate a XIPropertyNotify event for that device. XIChangeProperty performs the following:
If the specified format is 8, the property data must be a char array. If the specified format is 16, the property data must be a uint16_t array. If the specified format is 32, the property data must be a uint32_t array.
The lifetime of a property is not tied to the storing client. Properties remain until explicitly deleted, until the device is removed, or until the server resets. The maximum size of a property is server dependent and can vary dynamically depending on the amount of memory the server has available. (If there is insufficient space, a BadAlloc error results.)
XIChangeProperty can generate BadAlloc, BadAtom, BadMatch, BadValue, and BadDevice errors.
The XIDeleteProperty function deletes the specified property only if the property was defined on the specified device and causes the X server to generate a XIPropertyNotify event for the device unless the property does not exist.
XIDeleteProperty can generate BadAtom and BadDevice errors.
BadAlloc The server failed to allocate the requested resource or server memory.
BadAtom A value for an Atom argument does not name a defined Atom.
BadValue Some numeric value falls outside the range of values accepted by the request. Unless a specific range is specified for an argument, the full range defined by the argumentcqs type is accepted. Any argument defined as a set of alternatives can generate this error.
BadDevice An invalid device was specified. The device does not exist.
BadAtom An invalid property was specified. The property does not exist.